Immunologic aspects of autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT), immunodiagnosis, patient monitoring, and the purging of bone marrow have been studied in individual patients. It was demonstrated that the most sensitive method for detecting lymphoid cells which show the phenotypes of ALLs of B or T lineage was double immunofluorescence staining for nuclear terminal transferase (TdT) and B or T lineage antigens. With the help of these sensitive tests in the presence of rabbit complement (C'), MAbs CD10 (RFAL3 of IgM class), CD19 (SB4 of IgM class), and their cocktail were capable of eliminating greater than 3 log blast cells of B lineage ALL in 84%, 75.5%, and 90% of cases, respectively. The same reagents lysed 26.8%, 0%, and 45% of blasts in the presence of human C'. CD7 (RFT2, IgG2) eliminated greater than 3 log T-ALL blast cells in 73% of cases. The proliferative fractions of leukemic blasts were also TdT+ and sensitive to lysis with MAb and C'. On the basis of these observations MABs were selected for purging in 36 patients undergoing ABMT in first remission (10 patients considered to be at a high risk of relapse), second and third remissions (23 and 2 patients), and without entering into remission (1 patient). The efficacy of eliminating the MAb-reactive cells from the bone marrow inoculum was also documented in five patients. By the use of sensitive immunologic assay (TdT/cytoplasmic CD3 double staining) in patients with T-ALL, no residual leukemia (less than 10(-4] could be detected at the time of transplantation. Following an observation period of 5-34 months, 24 of the 36 patients are alive and well with no procedure-related mortality.